Page images
PDF
EPUB

TITLE 194.

NAVAL BATTALION.

Acts relating to: See Political Code. Appendix, title, Naval Battalion, p. 1047.

TITLE 195.

NEVADA COUNTY.

A reference to special laws relating to Nevada county is contained in Deering's Annotated Penal Code, pp. 642-644.

See also "An act authorizing incorporated cities to acquire, by gift, purchase or condemnation proceedings, water, water-rights, reservoir sites, rights of way, and other appliances for supplying such cities and their inhabitants with water." [Approved March 14, 1891, Stats. 1891, p. 102.]

TITLE 196.

NORMAL SCHOOLS.

Acts relating to: See Political Code, Appendix, title, Normal Schools.

TITLE 197.

NOTARIES.

Act relating to: See Political Code, Appendix, title, Notaries, p. 1050.

TITLE 198.

OFFICERS.

Acts relating to: See Penal Code, Appendix, title, Officers, p. 586; Political Code, Appendix, title, Officers, p. 1051.

TITLE 199.

OLEOMARGARINE.

Acts relating to: See Penal Code, Appendix, title, Oleomargarine, p. 587.

TITLE 200.

OLIVE OIL.

Act regulating sale of imitation: See Penal Code, Appendix, title, Olive Oil, p. 590.

TITLE 201

ORANGE COUNTY.

An Act to create the county of Orange, to define the boundaries thereof, to determine the county seat by an election. and to provide for its or ganization and election of officers, and to classify said county.

[Approved March 11, 1889; 1889, 123.] Consult the statutes of 1889 for the act.

TITLE 202.

ORDINANCES.

An Act to require ordinances and resolutions passed by the City Council or other legislative body of any municipality to be presented to the Mayor or other chief executive officer of such municipality for his approval.

[Stat. approved March 27, 1897. Stats. 1897, chapcxxix.

The People of the State of California, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows: Section 1. Every ordinance and every resolu tion of the City Council of any municipality pro

viding for any specific improvement, or the granting of any franchise, or other privilege, or affecting real property interests, or the expenditure of more than one hundred dollars of the public moneys, or levying tax or assessment, or establishing rates for artificial light, and every ordinance or resolution imposing a duty or penalty, which shall have passed the City Council, shall, before it takes effect, be presented to the Mayor for his approval. The Mayor shall return such ordinance or resolution to the City Council within ten days after receiving it. If he approve it he shall sign it, and it shall then take effect. If he disapprove it he shall specify his objections thereto in writing. If he do not return it with such disapproval within the time above specified, it shall take effect as if he had approved it. The objections of the Mayor shall be entered at large on the journal of the City Council, and the City Council shall cause the same to be immediately published. The City Council shall, after five, and within thirty days after such ordinance or resolution shall have been returned with the Mayor's disapproval, reconsider and vote upon the same; and if the same shall, upon reconsideration, be again passed by the affirmative vote of not less than three-fourths of all the members, the presiding officer shall certify that fact on the ordinance or resolution, and when so certified, it shall take effect as if it had received the approval of the Mayor; but if the ordinance or resolution shall fail to receive upon the first vote thereon after its return with the Mayor's disapproval, the affirmative votes of three-fourths of all the members, it shall be deemed finally lost. The vote on such reconsideration shall be taken by ayes and noes, and the names of the members voting for or against the same shall be entered in the journal; provided, that the provisions of this section shall not apply to cities in which the Mayor is a member of the City Council, or other governing body. Sec. 2. The word "municipality," and the word "city," as used in this Act, shall be understood and so construed as to include, and is hereby declared to include, all corporations heretofore organized and now existing, and those hereafter organized, for municipal purposes.

Sec. 3. The term "City Council" is hereby de

Orphans.

clared to include any body or board which, under the law, is the legislative department of the gov ernment of any city.

Sec. 4. In municipalities in which there is no Mayor, then the duties imposed upon said officer by the provisions of this Act shall be performed by the President of the Board of Trustees, or other chief executive officer of the municipality.

Sec. 5. This Act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage, and all Acts and parts of Acts in conflict with this Act are hereby repealed.

TITLE 203.

ORPHANS.

Acts relating to: See Civil Code, Appendix, title, Infancy, p. 775 et seq. Consult, also, the following acts:

An act to appropriate funds for the relief of the several orphan asylums of this state. [Approved April, 1872; Stats. 1871-2, p. 644.]

An act to appropriate money for the support of orphans, half-orphans, and abandoned children. [Approved March 25, 1880; 1880, 13 (Ban, ed. 48).]

These acts appropriated under certain limitations from the general funds a sum at a certain rate per child for each child maintained in institutious.

They have not been repealed, but Governor Budd vetoed an appropriation under it in 1895. Statutes 1895, p. 290, and no appropriation was made under it in 1897.

An act in relation to the care of orphan and abandoned children. 1873-4, 297.] [Approved March 7, 1874;

An act to authorize managers of orphan asylums to give their consent to the adoption of certain children under their care. [Approved April

1878; 1877-8. 963.]

1.

TITLE 204.

OYSTERS.

The Political Code, section 19, and the Penal Code, section 23, expressly continued in force an act concerning oysters, passed April 28, 1851, 432. and an act concerning oyster beds, approved April 2, 1866 1865-6, 848; but both those acts were repealed by the following act, which is now in force:

[ocr errors]

An act to encourage the planting and cultivation of oysters. [Approved March 30, 1874; 1873-4. 940.]

The object of the act sufficiently appears in the title.

TITLE 205.

PHARMACY.

An act to regulate the practice of pharmacy and sale of poisons in the state of California. [Approved March 11, 1891; Stats. 1891, p. 86.] Section 1. From and after the first day of Janlary. A. D. eighteen hundred and ninety-two, it shall be unlawful for any person to conduct any pharmacy or store for dispensing or compounding nedicines, unless such person be a registered pharmacist, within the meaning of this act; and It shall be unlawful for any person to compound or dispense any physician's prescription, unless such person be a registered pharmacist or a regstered assistant pharmacist, within the meaning of this act, except as hereinafter provided.

Sec. 2. Any person, in order to be a registered harmacist, must be a graduate of pharmacy, a icentiate in pharmacy, or a practicing pharmacist. Sec. 3. Graduates in pharmacy are persons who lave had four years' experience in stores where he prescriptions of medical practitioners are compounded, and each must have obtained a diploma 'rom a legally constituted college of pharmacy.

« PreviousContinue »